Santiago Giraldo
Analyst · Colliers Securities. Please go ahead
Thank you, Christian. Beginning with our capital resources on Slide number 7. A key priority for us during the quarter was to reinforce our balance sheet strength for continued success. We made great progress on that front. We generated a record cash flow from operations of approximately $24.3 million. This was in excess of adjusted EBITDA, reflecting aggressive cash management such as tight cost controls, working capital improvements and automation benefits. With the recent completion of a significant phase of growth investments, CapEx was largely limited to maintenance spend. These collective actions helped improve our total liquidity to $136 million as of June 30, representing an over 40% increase compared to $95 million at the end of March. We further deleveraged our business to end the second quarter at a comfortable level of 2.2x net debt to adjusted EBITDA, with no significant maturities until 2022. From a capital allocation perspective, we remain prudent in our approach with our near-term focus on balance sheet strength and returning a portion of capital to shareholders through our dividend. Looking at the drivers of revenue on Slide number 8. The month of April represented the majority of lower revenues for the quarter primarily due to the two non-invoicing weeks during the first half of the month. As we have discussed on today's call, we experienced a significant demand recovery that drove sequential monthly revenue improvement as the quarter progressed. This sequential revenue improvement was mainly in the U.S. which represented 97% of revenues for the quarter with revenues from Latin America being slow to recover as construction sites continue to prepare for safe operations. U.S. revenues for the quarter were $79.1 million compared to $99.3 million in the prior year quarter. It's important to remember that a majority of the revenue not invoiced during the quarter represent active projects in backlog, which we expect to deliver in future quarters. Adjusting for those two non-invoicing weeks, our U.S. revenue was down in the high single-digit percent range, which we believe was more reflective of our market environment. Additionally, in the prior year, the second quarter of 2019 represented our highest revenue quarter on record which provided for a difficult year-over-year comparison. In June and July, our U.S. revenue was down a more modest mid single digits, helped in part by residential, so we feel good about the direction of our U.S. business into the third quarter. In Colombia, and other Latin American countries, the steep decline in revenue was a function of significant business disruptions. We experienced delayed activity with many customers that have been slow to adapt to the expensive preparations required at job sites to adhere to varying COVID-19 guidelines. Revenues in Latin America remain in the early stages of recovery. Looking at the drivers of adjusted EBITDA on Slide number 9. We focus our efforts on operational excellence to achieve record margins in gross profit, operating income and adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. We improved adjusted EBITDA as a percent of sales by an impressive 580 basis points to 28.4% compared to 22.6% in the prior year quarter. In dollars adjusted EBITDA was $23.3 million compared to $25.8 million with lower revenues, mostly offset by a 470 basis point improvement in gross margin to 38.8% and a $4 million reduction in SG&A. The improvement in gross margin primarily reflected lower raw material costs attributable to lower aluminum prices, lower direct labor and material waste from our automation initiatives, as strong dollar and favorable mix of revenue during the quarter. We expect continued year-over-year margin improvement for the rest of the year given some sustainable benefits related to our automation investments and weak local currency for the rest of the year. The reduction in SG&A was primarily driven by less variable costs related to shipping, travel and commissions given lower revenues in the quarter. We continue to monitor areas where we can limit costs but we are encouraged by improvements in our markets over the past couple of months. We believe that our lean, highly efficient and vertically integrated operations leave us in a great place to maintain our industry leading margins as we look to capitalize the recovery. Looking at the activity in our markets on Slide number 11. Consistent with our revenue trend and recent improvement in the architectural billing index, we believe that the worst of the pandemic related economic impacts are behind us. U.S. activity is normalizing as many economies continue to reopen and customers pick up the pace on projects. The COVID-19 outbreak in Florida has now had an adverse impact on our major projects in that market. On the residential side, we are seeing promising trends that indicate that the rebound taking place as a long runway, increase in housing starts and a strong order growth reported by many large public homebuilders continue to provide evidence that the new residential demand is strong. As Jose mentioned earlier, in June we reached a monthly record for residential orders. We typically see our residential orders translate into invoicing over 60-day to 90-day period. Residential now represent 19% of our U.S. revenue and is likely to remain the fastest growing portion of our business. Moving to our outlook on Slide number 13. We are encouraged by our pace of activity into the month of July. We are working closely with our customers to service existing projects and we are gaining share as opportunities arise to outperform in our markets. Based on our current momentum and invoicing schedule, we expect sequential monthly revenue to grow as we move through the third quarter. We expect the U.S. to represent the significant majority of our revenues through the year, with growth led by single-family residential sales. Our exceptional gross margin performance in the second quarter included returns on automation initiatives which are contributing to results as planned. During the quarter, we also benefited from favorable timing of input costs and manufacturing versus installation revenue. As our markets stabilize, we expect gross margins to trend back toward a normalized level in the low to mid 30s range. This normalized margin is unchanged from our previously communicated range that had already factoring the benefits of automation initiatives. In summary, we are positioned to successfully navigate the current environment with our structural advantages, strong liquidity position and industry leading margins. As we execute our strategy during this unprecedented period, we will maintain our focus on safely serving customers, aggressively managing costs, strengthening our balance sheet and generating returns for our shareholders. With that, we will be happy to answer your questions. Operator, please open the line for questions.